33
/fr/
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
August 1, 2025
Public Timelines
Menu
Public Timelines
FAQ
Public Timelines
FAQ
For education
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students
Cabinet
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students
Open cabinet
Créer
Close
Create a timeline
Public timelines
Library
FAQ
Télécharger
Export
Créer une copie
Premium
Intégrer dans le site Web
Share
Batteries and Lightbulbs
Category:
Autre
mise à jour avec succès:
11 sept. 2018
0
0
423
Auteurs
Created by
Jacqueline Xie
Attachments
Comments
Les événements
The Voltaic Pile Alessandro Volta puts together disks of zinc and silver separated by cloth soaked in salt water, making a source of an electric current that didn't need to be recharged. However downsides included the fact that the batteries had a short life of an hour, and were prone to electrolyde leaks
The Daniell Cell Battery Chemist John Frederic Daniell invents the Daniell Cell, an improvement on the Volta Pile as it eliminated some problems such as hydrogen bubbles. The Daniell Cell uses copper sulphate in an earthenware container filled with sulfuric acid and a zinc electrolade
Lead Acid Batteries Gaston Planté makes the first rechargeable battery by passing both a charging and discharging current through the battery so it could be reused. The first design includes two lead sheets with rubber strips between them.
The Leclanché Cell Georges Leclanché creates the Leclanché cell, made of carbon and zinc in a porous material. It had a faster absorption rate and greater shelf- life than previous batteries
The Leclanché Cell Again Carl Gassner takes the Leclanché cell and prolongs the shelf-life even further, patenting it and making it possible for batteries to start becoming practical to use
The Nickel-Cadmium Battery The first nickel-cadmium battery was invented by Waldermer Jungmer, which is rechargeable and is the first to use an alkaline electrolyte giving it better energy density than an acid battery
The Edison Battery Thomas Edison takes the idea of the nickel- cadamium battery makes a slightly different version which he patented. The battery found use in the industrial market due to it's long shelf-life
Alkaline Batteries Lewis Urry helps make the shift from zinc- carbon batteries to alkaline batteries as they provide greater energy at higher currents, extending battery life
Lithium Batteries Gilbert Newton Lewis starts experimenting with lithium batteries. They don't become commercially available until almost a century later
Sony's Lithium Battery Sony commercialises the lithium battery, one of the most popular types of rechargeable batteries today
The First Electric Arc Lamp Humphry Davy, and English chemist connects two wires to a battery and puts a charcoal strip between them, which glows.
A Basic Lamp Warren de la Rue puts a platinum coil in a tube, passing an electric current through it. The use of platinum made it impractical for widespread use
Electrical Incandescent Arc Lamp Is created by Edward Shephard, using a charcoal filament
The First Lightbulb Heinrich Göbel, a watchmaker, creates the first lightbulb using a bamboo filament inside a glass bulb
Mercury Vacuum Pump The pump, invented by Herman Sprengel, created a vacuum inside the lightbulb, eliminating certain gases and reducing blackening
Sir Joseph Swan The English Physics developed a lightbulb lasting 13 hours using a carbon fibre filament
Thomas Edison Invents a carbon filament lightbulb that could burn for 40 hours. He used an oxygenless bulb and his lightbulbs were marketable to the general population.
Argon and Nitrogen Bulb The efficiency and durability of the bulb is improved by Irving Langmuir with a tighter filament coil and argon and nitrogen inside
Mercury Vapour Lamp Peter Cooper Hewitt makes a mercury vapour lamp, a discharge lamp using mercury emitting a blue/green light, a precursor to the fluorescent lamp
LED Bulbs The most widely used lightbulb type today, Nick Holonyak invents the first visible spectrum Light- Emitting Diode
About & Feedback
Un accord
Confidentialité
Bibliothèque
FAQ
Support 24/7
Cabinet
Get premium
Donate
The service accepts bank transfer (ACH, Wire) or cards (Visa, MasterCard, etc). Processed by Stripe.
Secured with SSL
Comments